Shares of Redwire Soar After Landing Lucrative Deals in Aerospace and Military Sectors

Table of Contents Redwire (RDW) shares have rallied over 13% during Friday’s trading session, extending a three-day winning streak that has propelled the stock to consecutive new peaks. The aerospace and defense contractor is currently hovering near $17.49 as of Friday’s opening hours. Redwire Corporation, RDW The surge follows a series of significant contract announcements spanning both the company’s unmanned aerial vehicle and space technology segments. The firm secured an additional $15 million purchase order from the U.S. Army’s 1st Aviation Brigade for another batch of Stalker surveillance drones. This brings cumulative Stalker contracts to $24.8 million across the last eight-month period. Following that announcement came a separate long-term agreement with an unnamed NATO member nation for delivery of Penguin Mk3 unmanned aircraft systems. Company officials characterized the deal as “high eight-figures,” placing its value in the several tens of millions of dollars. Both agreements flow through Redwire’s Edge Autonomy unit, which the corporation purchased in 2025 for $925 million. The acquisition initially surprised industry observers — Redwire had established itself primarily as a space-focused enterprise. That strategic gamble appears to be paying dividends. Redwire currently maintains a $498.1 million contract backlog, and these fresh wins contribute to what market watchers view as the crucial question: can expanding defense programs balance out the unpredictability inherent in fixed-price space development work? The drone announcements weren’t the company’s only positive news. Redwire secured prime contractor designation for DARPA’s “Otter” initiative — a program focused on creating air-breathing spaceplane technology for operations in very low Earth orbit (VLEO). These experimental spacecraft are engineered to partially refuel themselves by “breathing” atmospheric molecules in Earth’s upper reaches — a genuinely innovative approach in aerospace engineering. For the Otter program, Redwire selected Voyager Technologies (VOYG) as a subcontractor partner. Voyager will provide a high-precision Acceleration Measurement System designed to enable precise maneuvering in VLEO conditions. Voyager’s stock price climbed approximately 12% following the announcement. While no specific contract amount was revealed for Otter, the prime contractor position positions Redwire at the forefront of an advanced DARPA research program. Financial projections for Redwire show considerable variation across analyst estimates. Optimistic forecasts anticipate $887.3 million in revenue alongside $73.2 million in earnings by 2028 — suggesting approximately 50% compound annual revenue growth and a $322.7 million improvement from the current $249.5 million loss. More measured analyst projections estimate 2029 revenue around $736.7 million with earnings reaching $64.8 million. Certain valuation frameworks calculate fair value at $13.28 per share — approximately 24% beneath current market pricing. RDW’s 52-week trading range extends from $4.87 to $22.25, while Friday’s trading volume reached 55.4 million shares — more than twice the typical 26 million share average. The company’s market capitalization currently stands at $3.5 billion as of Friday’s trading.